Accepting
the grace and challenge of being builders of unity
(Vatican Radio) “The Word of God calls us to live in unity, that
the world might believe.” With these words, Pope Francis set the theme of
evangelization within the context of Jesus’ prayer for unity at the Last
Supper, during his homily for Mass at Bicentennial Park in Quito, Ecuador.
Evangelization, he said, does not consist in “grand words, or
complicated concepts” but in the “joy of the Gospel.” When Jesus prayed for
unity, in the night before His Passion and Death, He was experiencing “the
worst of this world, a world He nonetheless loved dearly.” In our day, too, we
are often confronted with a world “torn apart by wars and violence.” But it
would be a mistake to imagine that division and hatred occur only between
groups of people or countries. “Rather they are a manifestation of the
‘widespread individualism’ which divides us and sets us against one another.”
In response, the Pope said, we must take up “the cry of Jesus” and accept “the
grace and challenge of being builders of unity.”
Evangelization, he continued, can be a way to unite “our hopes,
concerns, ideals, and even utopian visions.” The desire for unity “involves the
delightful and comforting joy of evangelizing, the conviction that we have an
immense treasure to share, one which grows stronger from being shared.”
Evangelization does not mean proselytizing, forcing our beliefs on others, but
rather “attracting by our witness those who are far off.” Evangelization means
constantly fostering communion, not only outwardly, but also within the Church.
Pope Francis emphasized that this communion must flow from our
personal encounter with Christ, which leads us to encounter others in order to
lead them to Christ. This unity in Christ, he said, does not result in
uniformity, but rather in a “multi-faceted and inviting harmony.” Jesus prays
that all of us might be part of “a great family in which God is our Father and
all of us are brothers and sisters.” This unity makes us part of the divine
life of God, and this, the Pope said, “is the salvation which God makes
possible for us, and which the Church proclaims with joy: to be a part of the
divine ‘we’.”
In Bicentennial Park, commemorating two hundred years of
independence for Ecuador, Pope Francis linked the call to evangelization to
“the original cry for freedom in this country.” He said the cry of St Paul –
“Woe to me if I do not preach the Gospel” – is “a cry every bit as urgent and
pressing as was the cry for independence. It is similarly thrilling in its
ardour. May each of you be a witness to a fraternal communion which shines forth
in our world.” It is when we give of ourselves, he concluded, that “we discover
our true identity as children of God in the image of the Father and, like him,
givers of life; we discover that we are brothers and sisters of Jesus, to whom
we bear witness. This is what it means to evangelize; this is the new
revolution – for our faith is always revolutionary –, this is our deepest and
most enduring cry.”
You can find the full
text of Pope Francis' prepared remarks on our website.

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